HE CAME HOME AFTER 9 YEARS READY TO SAVE HIS MOTHER… THEN SAW THE TWO CHILDREN CLINGING TO HER SKIRT AND REALIZED HE HAD NEVER REALLY LEFT ALONE

HE CAME HOME AFTER 9 YEARS READY TO SAVE HIS MOTHER… THEN SAW THE TWO CHILDREN CLINGING TO HER SKIRT AND REALIZED HE HAD NEVER REALLY LEFT ALONE

“No wife?”

“No.”

“No other children?”

The questions sound simple. They are not. You shake your head slowly, trying to figure out why every answer feels like stepping deeper into water you cannot see the bottom of.

“No,” you say. “Just me.”

At that, your mother turns her face away for one second.

You know that motion. It is the one she used when your father died and the men from the ejido came to tell her there would be debts after all. It is the motion of someone rearranging pain quickly because there is work still to do and collapse is a luxury for those with help.

The little girl speaks first.

“Why are you here?”

Her voice is sharper than her age should allow, thin but fearless. Nine years old, maybe. Maybe younger. Hard to tell when poverty makes children stretch in some places and freeze in others. You blink, caught off guard by the question.

“To see my mother,” you say.

“She already had us.”

The words hit so cleanly you almost sway.

Your mother closes her eyes. “Sofía.”

But Sofía does not look ashamed. She looks like a child who has spent too long watching one exhausted adult hold up the roof of the world and has no patience left for men arriving at the end with polished smiles and trunk gifts. The boy beside her says nothing, though his fingers curl into the fabric of your mother’s skirt more tightly.

Now you hear it.

Not out loud. Inside yourself. A shape forming. A possibility so ugly your mind refuses it on instinct. You look from one child to the other. Dark eyes. The girl’s defiant mouth. The boy’s serious brow. A bone-deep familiarity in the way they stand apart while touching. Then your gaze drifts past them, through the doorway, to the kitchen wall.

There you are.

Or rather the ghost of you at twenty-four, smiling in a cheap studio shirt, hair combed carefully, looking hopeful enough to be dangerous. The old framed photograph still hangs where it always did. The boy catches you looking at it and says, very softly, “That’s him.”

The whole world narrows.

“That’s who?” you ask, though your blood already knows.

The boy looks at your mother, not at you.

Sofía answers instead.

“Our father.”

You do not feel your body breathe after that.

For one suspended second, everything stills. The road. The heat. The buzzing fly near the porch post. Your mother’s face becomes white with strain. The children do not move. Somewhere inside the house, a pot lid rattles softly in a breeze and sounds like judgment.

You hear yourself laugh once.

It is a terrible sound. Too thin. Too disbelieving. The kind men make when reality arrives wearing a face they are morally unequipped to recognize.

“No,” you say.

Your mother says nothing.

“No,” you repeat, louder now. “That’s impossible.”

Sofía lifts her chin even higher. “That’s what Abuelita said when we were born. But here we are.”

“Mija,” your mother whispers, but there is no force in it.

The boy, Mateo, is still staring at you with that strange old-man sadness children sometimes get when they have been lied to with tenderness too long. You look at their faces again, searching frantically for denial and finding only echoes. The line of the jaw. The color in the eyes. The shape of the ears. Biology has no mercy when timing does not protect you.

You turn to your mother.

“Whose children are these?”

She takes a breath that seems to scrape her ribs on the way in. “Yours.”

The word enters you like an axe.

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